3.5 BYA
no fossils of organisms with hard parts. the few soft body part fossils found rarely fossilize well.
changes in climate
By studying animals without backbones, animals with backbones , fossils of plant's track left behind by animals and piece together the conditions under which fossils were formed.
fossil correlation
The fossil record is basically the totality of fossils, discovered or undiscovered, and their placement within rock formations and sedimentary layers. The fossil record is important in helping us produce a chronology for the history of life on Earth as well as the evolutionary relationships between the organisms represented by the fossils. The number of fossils we have discovered remains incomplete, which is why we are continuously searching for more.
He dissected corpse to learn anatomy and studied fossils to understand the worlds history. Click on link below.
People want to know about fossils because fossils are history and tell us about history, and a lot of people find history fascinating.
Fossils aren't but the life that made them is.
Many discoveries in chemistry have influenced history.
The museum of natural history contains many fossils of prehistoric animals and plants and would be an extremely fascinating place for you daughter to learn more about fossils.
---- Informations: Paleonthology-is the study about fossils Paleontologists-are persons who study fossils ---- Other Questions??
Scientific discoveries have altered the course of history.
No. Because there are not enough fossils to do any more than to guess.
Antony Van Leeuwenhoek. With skill, diligence, an endless curiosity, and an open mind free of the scientific dogma of his day, Leeuwenhoek succeeded in making some of the most important discoveries in the history of biology. It was he who discovered bacteria, free-living and parasitic microscopic protists, sperm cells, blood cells, microscopic nematodes and rotifers, and much more. His researches, which were widely circulated, opened up an entire world of microscopic life to the awareness of scientists.
Are fossils found in Ireland? You bet--and not just in museums. http://www.habitas.org.uk/fossils/ http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/B/big_monster_dig/collecting_fossils/dave_martills_favourite.html For clickable versions of these links see below. If you need more examples, search "Irish Fossils" and variants in Google.
History
Rock fossils